Prof. Livingston has performed research on ferromagnetic, superconducting, and mechanical properties of metals and alloys. He is now primarily occupied with teaching and writing.
Director of the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory. Discovered that neutrinos have mass and that they can change from one type of neutrino to another.
Detected an elusive subatomic particle which has been sought for over a decade: the single top quark.
Predicted and measured the cosmic background radiation from the big bang, as well as predicting the existence of dark matter and dark energy in the universe.
Astronomer and engineer who created a new design in reflecting telescopes
World famous cosmologist and science communicator
Nuclear scientist killed by radiation accident at Los Alamos, New Mexico in 1946.
Discovered inverse Raman effect spectroscopy
World expert on superconductivity
Won the Nobel Prize for verifying the quark theory
Pioneer in nuclear science; designed and built Canada's first mass spectrometer, built McMaster University to a respected research facility.
First Canadian woman astrophysicist
Contributing to theories on gravity and black holes, early cosmology, and quantum phenomena
Canada's most respected astronomer
Invented and developed the Prism Light Guide System